Quote:
Originally posted by ReginaPhalange
It's staggering
They had no plans to announce a cure at the conference. Why are people having such a hard time understanding this? The conference is an annual event
The scientists and researchers lost on MH17 were leaders in their field, meaning they had the best chance of developing a cure. The article is simply suggesting that now they're gone, is hope for a cure gone as well.
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No one is having a hard time understanding it. I get it. What I'm saying is NO, hope for a cure is not suddenly gone simply because hundreds of top researchers were murdered in the crash. Whatever research they had done towards developing a cure does not end with them. Scientists don't work that way. They would have documented and backed up all of their research multiple times over. And if you're suggesting that they were the only people in the world with the brain power to come up with a cure in the future, then that makes no sense either. There will be more scientists who will pick up and continue where these amazing men and women left off.
Its tragic that they died, but there is still hope for AIDS cures. Even with the best gone, there will be more bright men and women to rise up and take their place and take the torch.
This article is sensationalist at best, the author is just trying to rile people up and cause hysteria, and its clearly working.
